81 Wis. 344 | Wis. | 1892

OetoN, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying the motion of the appellants, made in the case of Holstein against Mohr, in effect that the respondent pay over to the appellants certain money in his hands as receiver in said case, claimed to belong to them. The facts are substantially as follows:

The said Holstein and Mohr were partners in the grain commission business at Milwaukee, under the name and style of Mohr, Zinkeisen & Co. On the 7th day of July, 1891, attachment proceedings were begun against said firm at the suit of Marshall, Ilsley & Co., their creditors. Prior to that day, Mohr, Zinkeisen & Oo. purchased of the appellants a car-load of corn, which was shipped to them, and without unloading the car-load was sold to Jackson Milling Company. About the same time the said firm purchased another car-load of corn of the appellants, shipped to them, and without unloading the said corn it was sold by them to Dunham & Smith, so that Mohr, Zinkeisen & Co. owed the appellants, and Jackson Milling Company and Dunham & Smith owed them, about the same amount for said corn *346on tbe 8th day of July, 1891. On the morning of that day, Mohr, Zinkeisen & Co. mailed to Jaokson Milling Company the following order:

“July 8th, 1891.

“Jaclcson Milling Oo., Centradla, Wis.: — Please return proceeds car 38,652, corn, at forty-seven and a half cents a bushel net, to H. D. Lame <& Oo. Tama City, la.

[Signed] “ Mohe, ZiNxeiseN & Co.”

And substantially the same order was at the same time mailed by them to Dunham & Smith, Depere, Wis. Later on that day Holstein commenced an action against Mohr for the dissolution of the partnership between them and for an accounting; and the Respondent was appointed a receiver of the assets of said firm. Some time afterwards the appellants made the motion which resulted in the order appealed from. There is no evidence that the Jackson Milling Company or Dunham & Smith ever received said orders, and the time was too short for them to have received them before said receiver was appointed, and the appellants were not notified and had no knowledge of them until long after the receiver was appointed and the Jackson Milling Company had paid said money to the receiver.

The learned counsel of the appellants seem to consider' this money as a fund,” which had been equitably assigned to the appellants, before the receiver was appointed, by the mailing of these orders, and have cited many cases applicable to it as a “ fund.” But it will be observed that the corn was sold and delivered by the appellants to Mohr, Zinkeisen & Co., and by them to Jackson Milling Company and Dun-ham & Smith, and had passed into general market; and there remained no lien or interest of any of these parties over or in the corn. It is clear enough that this money was nota “fund,” in the legal acceptation of the word. A fund is a deposit of resources, or money appropriated as the foundation of some commercial operation, or a, store *347laid up to draw from. The corn was sold, and, although the consideration money is called in the orders the “ proceeds ” of the corn, it was the price at which the corn was sold at so much a bushel net. It was a debt, and nothing but a debt. Mohr, Zinkeisen & Go. owe the appellants on the purchase, and Jackson Milling Company and Dunham & Smith owe them on their purchase, of the corn. It is therefore no fund, or the assignment of a fund, but strictly and properly a novation, where A. owes B., and B. owes C., and it is agreed that A. pay the debt directly to C.

With this clear understanding of the nature and legal character of the transactions, we are ready to apply the legal principles and authorities which govern them. The learned counsel of the appellants claim that the bare mailing of these orders to Jackson Milling Company and Dun-han & Smith, for them to pay the appellants, ipso f apto transferred or assigned this so-called “fund” to them'before the receiver was appointed, and made an appropriation of it beyond the power of reexfi ui> ■invocation. But the authorities cited do not any ‘ of them so hold. They are all cases where the creditor had notice or consented to receive the fund in the frauds of the debtor. The debtor himself need not have notice. The orders were drawn to the appellants withoutAheir knowledge. It takes more than one party ^tflfínake a contract. This was. inchoate and imperfect, the beginning only, and incomplete. Neither the appellants •nor the debtors had any notice of it. The orders were merely fugitive papers in the air or mail when the respondent was appointed receiver and became entitled to the money. There could not possibly be found authorities which hold that such an incompleted transaction assigned the fund. There are some sentences in some of the cases cited that briefly state the principle that such an order transfers.or assigns the fund at once, but they are in cases where the payer has notice or the order has come to his *348bands. The following sentence is extracted from the headnote of Conway v. Cutting, 51 N. H. 407, and restated in the appellants’ brief as the law of this case, as follows: “ A written order by a creditor upon his debtor, requesting him to pay to .a third person, is an equitable assignment of a chose in action.” The facts of the case were that the order was given to the creditor and was by him presented to the drawee and accepted.

(1) In all such cases, whether it is an attempted assignment of a fund as such or a novation, notice to the creditor or payee is essential. There must be privity between them in all cases, and until the payee has notice of the order or draft the debtor may revoke or countermand it. The money or fund still remains under his control. Seaman v. Whitney, 24 Wend. 260; Christmas v. Russell, 14 Wall. 70; Ex parte Tremont Nail Co. 16 N. B. R. 448; Rogers v. Hosack's Ex’rs, 18 Wend. 319; Christmas’s Admir v. Griswold, 8 Ohio St. 558; Ford v. Garner, 15 Ind. 298; Pearce v Roberts, 27 Mo. 179; Sterling v. Ryan, 72 Wis. 36; Lynch v. Austin, 51 Wis. 287; French v. Langdon, 76 Wis. 29; Johannes v. Phenix Ins. Co. 66 Wis. 50. Thfe^e last are novation cases, where the contract must be complete between the parties, and especially privity of the creditor. (2) Bankruptcy, and the appointment of an assignee or any other disposition of the money or fund, will revtíí-e such an order before the creditor has notice of it. 1 Am & Eng. Ency. of Law, 839; Ex parte Hall, L. R. 10 Ch. Div. 615; Scott v. Porcher, 3 Mer. 652-664; Ex parte Nichols, 22 Ch. Div. 782, 20 Cent. Law J. 499.

(3) The appointment of a receiver of a partnership in a suit for dissolution vests the title to the partnership assets in the receiver, without any formal assignment or other act of the partners. High, Receivers (2d ed.), §§ 538, 539.

(4) The transfer must be complete so as to give the creditor or payee the right to sue for it, and the drawee be *349liable to pay it. Beers v. Spooner, 9 Leigh, 153; Tiernan v. Jackson, 5 Pet. 580; Beans v. Bullitt, 57 Pa. St. 221; Wright v. Ellison, 1 Wall. 22. And this is an indispensable principle in casés of novation. See above cases.

. Under the facts and in view of the authorities' it seems very clear that the appellants had secured no right to these moneys before they came into the hands of the receiver and the attaching or general creditors of the firm obtained an interest in them.

By the Court — The order of the circuit court is affirmed.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.